GDP may fall again in Q2. Does it mean recession?
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[July 21, 2022]
By Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Between the
backlogged orders from Christmas, ongoing high demand, and an improving
flow of products from around the world, goods flooded into the United
States in the first three months of this year at a record $3.4 trillion
annual pace.
It was good news, evidence that U.S. consumers felt flush enough to
spend, and that global supply chains were healing after many months of
disarray due to the pandemic.
But it also caused one of the largest ever import-led hits to U.S. gross
domestic product, making it seem as if the nation's economy was ailing
rather than that the world was getting back to normal. In calculating
gross domestic product, meant as the sum of final goods and services
created by U.S. companies and workers, imports are subtracted from the
bottom line -- and from January through March that was enough to push
the U.S. into the red with an annualized growth rate of -1.6%.
That figure, driven at least in part by the vagaries of a still
unpredictable supply chain, now figures into a politically sensitive
debate about whether the U.S. economy is on the brink of recession.
When GDP for the April through June period is released next week it may
be negative again, and by one common rule of thumb two quarters of
negative GDP growth would mean the U.S. is already in a recession.
That remains far from the case under the more formal standards
economists use, particularly because hiring, perhaps the most important
touchstone, remains strong. A recent Reuters poll showed economists
upping the likelihood of a downturn over the next year to 40%, but until
workers start getting thrown out of jobs it is unlikely one has begun.
It will beg the question, however, of just what GDP says about the
health of the economy, and whether alternative measures, most notably
the related concept of Gross Domestic Income, might better reflect
what's happening right now.
GDP: "CRAPPY" PERHAPS, BUT...
GDP emerged from efforts during the Great Depression to find a
systematic way to measure the U.S. economy. At a high level it is meant
to show whether companies and workers produced more over one three-month
period than they did in the three months before that.
Usually expressed as a yearly rate of growth, it is one of the chief
benchmarks referenced by politicians and investors to reflect the
economy's overall strength or weakness.
But it is also an accounting identity that simply adds up different
buckets, specifically the amounts spent by people and government on
final goods and services, the amounts government and businesses invest,
and the net of exports minus imports.
It has, critics argue, some important omissions. If a child is placed in
day care, for example, the payments to the day care center increase GDP.
If a parent supplies the care, the value of that service is not
reflected.
Likewise, globally complex supply chains often rely on intellectual
property from one country and parts from a multitude of others. The
value isn't spread around, however, but registered as GDP for the
country that ships the final product.
"It is easy to say that it is a crappy measure but what do you replace
it with? It is like all accounting. There are choices made of what to
measure," said Christian Lundblad, finance professor at the University
of North Carolina Kenan-Flagler Business School. Upcoming GDP numbers
"will show a recession in a back of the envelope way. It does not mean
anything."
WHAT HAPPENED IN Q1?
Many economists and policymakers share the view that first quarter U.S.
GDP was one more outlier in an era when it has been hard to distinguish
between the economic signal coming from data and the noise caused by the
pandemic.
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People eat at a mostly empty restaurant with tables on the street,
in the financial district during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
pandemic in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S.,
September 9, 2020. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
The first quarter "I don't think was negative GDP,"
because it was driven by seemingly one-off changes in items like
imports and inventories, Richmond Federal Reserve Bank President
Thomas Barkin said recently. "Private sales and domestic purchases
were healthy."
The second-quarter number is expected to reflect firmer evidence of
an actual slowdown.
In particular, consumer spending, once adjusted for inflation,
appears to be cooling.
Personal consumption is a major component of the U.S. economy, and
it has been expected to drop following the surge of spending during
the pandemic. Indeed, Federal Reserve officials note, the higher
interest rates they are using to battle inflation are meant to slow
demand, so to some extent negative GDP might be healthy if it helps
slow price increases.
With demand for workers still high, Fed officials hope that can
happen without too much change in actual employment - and without an
actual recession.
"The path we are on is supposed to be dampening demand," Barkin said
in comments before the Fed's current blackout period. "The challenge
is to know if we have gone too far.”
One closely watched series produced by the Atlanta Fed, called
GDPNow, tracks how incoming data influences estimated GDP for the
current quarter. The initial estimate for the second quarter began
at 1.9% in late April. It has declined to -1.6% as of July 19, with
the biggest change coming from a decline in the expected
contribution from personal consumption.
IS THERE A BETTER MEASURE?
Where GDP measures output, Gross Domestic Income measures the wages
and profits that come from selling it.
In theory the two should be the same, but right now a wedge is
growing between them.
That could mean trouble. If income is driven by rising employment,
and output is indeed falling, it implies a collapse in worker
productivity. It may be that employers are hoarding workers because
hiring it difficult, and if business does slow they may also be
quick to fire people -- causing incomes to converge back towards
output.
But there's another possibility. With the pandemic roiling estimates
of GDP, it could be, as St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said
recently, that "the GDI measure is more consistent with observed
labor markets, suggesting the economy continues to grow."
Eventually the two should grow close again, and economists will be
watching closely to see which moves towards the other.
"Either output will start picking up as the economy averts
recession," Peterson Institute for International Economics fellow
Jason Furman wrote recently, "or employment will start falling as
the economy slips into recession."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; editing by Diane Craft)
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